All Content from Business Insider 09月13日
Uber司机因GPS定位问题被封号,部分司机称是系统误判
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

近期,Uber因司机涉嫌操纵GPS定位而大规模封禁其账号,引发争议。部分司机表示自己并未进行任何GPS定位操纵,认为这是系统误判。这种在零工经济中常见的突然封号且申诉困难的情况,给许多依赖Uber收入的司机带来了经济困扰。Uber方面表示,封禁账号是为了保障平台安全与可靠运行,并会综合GPS信号和手机信号塔数据等多种信号来判断是否存在欺诈行为。然而,有司机指出,GPS技术本身存在不准确性,有时会导致系统误判,例如在隧道中手机信号丢失后,GPS定位突然出现较大偏差,可能被Uber系统误解为GPS操纵。目前,受影响的司机正寻求申诉和通过其他平台维持生计。

⛽️ Uber近期大规模封禁部分司机账号,理由是涉嫌操纵GPS定位。此举引发了部分司机的强烈不满,他们坚称自己并未进行任何GPS定位操纵,认为Uber的自动化系统存在误判的可能性。

🤖 零工经济平台中,账号突然被封禁且申诉途径有限的情况并不少见。Uber此次针对GPS定位操纵的打击行动,让一些司机面临收入中断的困境,并迫使他们寻找其他平台(如Lyft)来维持生计。

📍 司机们指出,GPS技术本身存在局限性,例如在信号不佳的区域(如隧道)可能出现定位不准或突然跳变的情况。这种技术上的不确定性,可能导致Uber的自动化系统错误地将正常的定位波动解读为欺诈行为。

⚖️ Uber表示,封禁账号是维护平台安全和可靠性的必要措施,并会综合多种数据信号进行判断。但对于被错误封禁的司机来说,他们正通过申诉甚至强制仲裁等方式,试图恢复账号并追回损失。

Uber has deactivated some drivers on the grounds that they were manipulating their GPS locations.

Uber is cracking down on drivers who it says are manipulating their GPS locations — and the effort is causing headaches for some gig workers.

In July, an Uber driver named Andre got a notification that Uber had deactivated his driver account because, according to the ride-hailing service, he had faked his phone's GPS location. He said he had no clue what that meant.

"I don't know what this is," he told Business Insider. "I didn't GPS-manipulate anything. I'm not smart enough to do that."

An Uber spokesperson told Business Insider that removing a driver from its platform "isn't a decision we take lightly." "We do it when we need to — to ensure the safe and reliable functioning of our platform," the spokesperson said in a statement.

For years, gig workers have complained that companies like Uber and Instacart deactivate the accounts they use to earn money, often with little or no explanation. Now, some, like Andre, are getting swept up in Uber's latest efforts to use geolocation to curb fraud on the app.

Some gig workers spoof their GPS locations to get better rides or delivery offers from apps like Uber and Instacart, for example. It's one form of fraud that gig work apps are trying to prevent. In other cases, gig workers appear to be using accounts registered under someone else's name.

But drivers say GPS technology isn't always accurate.

Andre said he met other Uber drivers in the same situation as him online and at Los Angeles' Greenlight Hub, a support center for Uber drivers. On forums for drivers, such as Uber-focused subreddits, posters shared screenshots of similar emails that cited GPS manipulation as the reason that Uber had deactivated their accounts.

Andre told Business Insider that he's now driving for Lyft in hopes of making up some of the income he lost by being locked out of his Uber account. He also said he plans to pursue arbitration with Uber — the dispute-resolution option that Uber mandates for drivers — as he tries to get back on the app.

Andre said he can see why the Uber app might have flagged his account. On some trips around Los Angeles, Andre said he noticed he wasn't where his phone's GPS said he was. Shortly after being deactivated, for example, he said his phone lost connectivity while he was in a tunnel. His iPhone showed him at the Crypto.com Arena through a map app.

The phone eventually updated with his accurate location when he reached the city's Little Tokyo district, he said — creating a sudden two-mile jump based on his GPS location.

"I'm convinced that Uber's automated system detected that Andre's location was here, then I suddenly popped up here," he said. That could've led Uber to believe that he was faking his location, Andre said.

Uber has yet to reactivate Andre's account despite his attempt to appeal the decision, he told Business Insider. He said that's left him without money to pay for rent and other living costs.

Another Uber driver in California said that he also received an email notifying him that Uber had deactivated his account in July due to alleged tampering with his GPS location.

The driver, who mostly delivered orders for Uber Eats, said that he had previously noticed that the GPS location that he saw on the Uber app was incorrect.

"In many situations that I was, for example, in the restaurant for a pickup, the Uber app showed that I was half a mile away from the location," he said.

Uber acts on "reports of fraud or behavior that goes against our Community Guidelines," the company spokesperson said. Uber reviews multiple signals, such as GPS signals and cellphone tower data, to determine whether fraud is likely.

Sergio Avedian, a part-time gig driver based in the Los Angeles area and senior contributor to the gig-driver-advocacy blog and YouTube channel The Rideshare Guy, said that the deactivations are evidence that Uber is trying to curb driver usage of GPS-spoofing apps.

Several years ago, those apps became popular among drivers that Avedian knew, he said. More recently, those apps have become less common, he said, as Uber has cracked down harder on their use.

The experience of having his Uber account deactivated — potentially based on location data — feels "dystopian," Andre said.

"This is what happens when your boss is a robot and AI, and not an actual human being," he said.

Do you have a story to share about Uber or other gig work? Contact this reporter at abitter@businessinsider.com or 808-854-4501.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

Uber GPS操纵 零工经济 账号封禁 自动化系统 技术误判 Gig Economy GPS Manipulation Account Deactivation Algorithmic Bias Tech Error
相关文章